I went play a local tournament today. The place wasn't a poolhall so much as a bar with two tables that were completely spent (to stay polite). The better one had a cloth with holes like if mites had had a field day, stains that looked very much like dried blood, was coming off at the pocket edges, and the rails seemed made of chewing gum. The tables were sitting on a raised platform made of old pallets and covered with carpeting, so that when the players walked on it, both tables shook like if there was a earthquake in progress. As for the balls, they were chipped, and the cueball had so many blue dots it looks like it had acne. The rack was similarly unimpressive.
I had paid the 12 euro entry fee before I could see the disastrous equipment. I wanted to cancel my entry, get my money back and go away, but the bar owner refused, so I figured I might as well do what I could.
To make a long story short, the tables were unplayable. Slow shots? Forget it, the cueball was swerving right and left around crud spots, and it looked like someone had left the handbrake anyway. Hard shots? completely inconsistent, and the ballls would jump out of the pockets half of the time. I played two games, then finally forfeited and packed. Playing was a semi-random affair at best, and there was just no way to play position, let alone build any kind of strategy. I felt overwhelmed by the crappiness of it all.
So, how do you handle that sort of situation? When I have to play on bad tables, I usually forget about any clever cueball control, adopt a hard, short, dry stroke, and I favor stop shots. But even that wasn't enough in this case. Do you know another "emergency playing mode" that can be used to control the game a bit and do a bit better than the local patrons?
I had paid the 12 euro entry fee before I could see the disastrous equipment. I wanted to cancel my entry, get my money back and go away, but the bar owner refused, so I figured I might as well do what I could.
To make a long story short, the tables were unplayable. Slow shots? Forget it, the cueball was swerving right and left around crud spots, and it looked like someone had left the handbrake anyway. Hard shots? completely inconsistent, and the ballls would jump out of the pockets half of the time. I played two games, then finally forfeited and packed. Playing was a semi-random affair at best, and there was just no way to play position, let alone build any kind of strategy. I felt overwhelmed by the crappiness of it all.
So, how do you handle that sort of situation? When I have to play on bad tables, I usually forget about any clever cueball control, adopt a hard, short, dry stroke, and I favor stop shots. But even that wasn't enough in this case. Do you know another "emergency playing mode" that can be used to control the game a bit and do a bit better than the local patrons?